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Reflecting on Telecom Act progress after 5 years, FCC Comr. Ness ...

Reflecting on Telecom Act progress after 5 years, FCC Comr. Ness said Thurs. she hoped Commission would “hold firm in our view” that it’s only after Bell companies have met statutory requirements such as cost-based pricing that they are allowed to enter long distance. She spoke to reporters at press breakfast one day after AT&T Chmn. Michael Armstrong suggested in National Press Club speech that long distance carriers were having so much trouble breaking into local markets it might not be worth effort (CD Feb 8 p7). He raised concerns such as inability to lease unbundled network elements at reasonable prices. Chmn. Powell this week also told reporters he didn’t think “deregulation is like the dessert” served only as reward for creation of competition. Asked about Armstrong warning that AT&T might exit markets where it offers local service, Ness said his frustration appeared to stem from pricing regime set on state-by-state basis. “I do think we need to look at some pricing issues, particularly together with our colleagues in the states,” Ness said, noting issue had emerged in conjunction with Bell long distance applications in Mass. and Okla. “We need to have prices that are forward-looking, that are consistent with the requirements of the Act,” Ness said. “We ought to be looking together with the states on what the best practices are.” She said “sustainable” competition has to be based on both cost-based measurements and efficient applications. Asked whether she expected Powell-led FCC to take less activist turn, Ness disputed “notion that all issues here are decided on partisan grounds.” Telecom issues historically are framed along lines of arguments that are more sympathetic to incumbents “versus those more sympathetic to the arguments of the insurgents,” she said. In other policy areas, Ness said she anticipated Commission would move forward on reciprocal compensation and related intercarrier compensation issues shortly. “I am hoping that we will address both of those pieces in the next few weeks,” she said. On wireless spectrum cap, which FCC is re-examining, Ness said it was time to assess purpose of cap. She said she also hoped that service providers with wireless licenses would “do everything in their powers to use spectrum more efficiently.”